Saturday, January 14, 2012

In Brownsville, Ropa Usada Art Replaces The Blues...

"The beauty of things was born before
eyes and sufficient to itself; the heart-
breaking beauty will remain when there
is no heart to break for it..."
- Robinson Jeffers, Credo

By PATRICK ALCATRAZ
The Paz Files

BROWNSVILLE, Texas - Sitting on a comfortable, but aging easy chair covered with annoying bright-purple velour, Larry "Bordello" Lopez lifted his cup of coffee as if lifting a toast to his woman, his bride, his greatest love. Shortly, after panning his eyes across his cavernous warehouse full of used clothing heaped in strategic piles, he pointed toward a corner of the dusty building and said, "That's the future of Brownsville over there."

Over there, as in by a row of shelves holding a variety of boxes and strappings, was a life-sized statue of the sort one sees in Italy. Glossy in shine, it seemed out of place in the old building much like, say, a sailboat would look if someone set it inside a barn in West Texas. Lopez is banking on an idea this town may never be ready for, but he's at it - bringing high-end Art to town to be shown - and offered via auction - inside what not long ago was an abandoned warehouse.

Ropa Usada is his trade. He sells the used clothing by the box to mostly Mexican citizens and entrepreneurs who re-sell it for a profit south of the border. This town's urban center is dotted with Ropa Usada stores, some as close as a 9-iron to the international bridge.

Will Ropa Usada art replace the Brownsville Blues as the town's main tourist attraction?

Larry Lopez's eyes grew wide as he set his coffee cup down on a new wicker table he had set up in front of his easy chair. Reaching for a slice of his beloved semita, he said: "It's as good as any stab we've made at becoming relevant to the rest of Texas and the United States. Who are we, is what I would ask. So we open a few bars and say the Blues will float our boat. But will it?"

He's pessimistic about the odds of that exploding into something fabulous.

Then, as if some prideful magician not done pulling rabbits out of his hat, he says - no screams: "It's not gonna happen! The Blues? Are you kidding me? The Blues!"

Lopez has thought about enlisting the aid of the same local bloggers who made the Blues push last month, a push that has evaporated and been dumped somewhere on the outs of town along with a few tons of Christmas gift wrapping paper and crushed bows.

"The thing is I want to get locals involved, but only if they know something about Art," he went on. "The Blues thing was okay, but those guys knew squat about the real thing. That's the difference between pros and wannabe amateurs. I can't afford an amateur."

And the ropa trade, we ask.

"It feeds my kids," Lopez threw out as another battered pickup truck backed into his loading dock. "See that guy? He's dropping a good $500 today. Nothing but ragged blue jeans, Mervyn's shirts and UT-PA sweaters in here today. I'll throw the guy a bone by giving him a few dozen pairs of shoes and maybe some of those weathered cowboy boots."

As we departed the new business, it struck us that this venture might succeed where the Blues project failed. The old, Mexican man had brought a young man with him and he simply occupied Lopez's easy chair, poured himself a cup of coffee and began barking orders at the kid doing the loading.

There was something clearly artsy about the mid-morning scene. In a Texas-Mexico border way, at least...

- 30 -

13 comments:

El Blue Magoo said...

hey, ropa usada is the blues. that's where those musicos buy their clothes! LOL!!!

Anonymous said...

El Blue, you got that right, homey. But you know everybody intown dresses like they buy their clothes at the ropa used stores, bro. have you seen Jerry McHsle's clothes? Jim Barton? Everybody shops there cause shirts are a quarter and pants 50 cents!

Anonymous said...

Pinche Brownsville, que blues Y que nada, puro crapo.

Anonymous said...

I guess the people that write bad things about ropa usada stores forgot that these places have existed since the 1960's, if you have been to place like New York or Los Angeles, they are called "vintage stores" or "Thrift stores". I remember being in Nashville and going to a "vintage store" downtown.
I guess the people that criticize small towns along the border must buy their clothes at SAKS 5th avenue or Paris designers to put down the "crapo"; or better yet, they know these second hand stores very well because THAT IS WHERE THEY BUY THEIR CLOTHES. Right Mr. Editor?

Patrick Alcatraz said...

ANON:...I do know a few "vintage" stores, in NYC and here in Austin (S. Lamar & Congress streets). I fear you have isolated the wrong angle to this posting. No disrespect or judgment was thrown out, just used clothing as backdrop to Browntown. Some writers use the bars on 14th Street, others the Tex-Mex joints downtown, and still others the county jail. A writer can't write about any place without feeling some fondness. I don't hate Brownsville. In fact, I'd enjoy visiting. And I will again... - Editor

El Mojao said...

Agree with Anon,(puro crapo) who in the hell, would be buying moldy smelly clothing from some cheap ass rotting downtown building, similiar like the bars in browntown. Who?? Not me bro, no sireee!!!

Anonymous said...

Hey Mr. Mojao, for a guy who swimmed the river, el mojao probably buys clothing at Fallas Pareds.
The article is right, brownsville, is puras old bildings, ropa usadas, a damn flea Market, ugly cheap looking cantinas, the town sucks.

ex-jail bird said...

Thrift Stores, Vintage Stores, Olivias Levier's ass, well Olivia's rear end is better looking than Brownsville second hand stores.
I hear some people sell second clothing through the inter-net, yes, and some low lifer buys the crappy stuff, que pinche lastima.

Anonymous said...

Who is Olivia? Is she a character in the Louise Herrera murder? Update please.

Anonymous said...

startling story. Browntown has always been a town one paycheck away from bankruptcy. Ropa Usada is its image. What the hell!

R. Lozano said...

Olivia is a beautiful woman with eyes that laugh and look into your soul at the same time. She has the oval face of a virginal saint but her bee-stung lips give her an alluring sexual quality. At 5’9’ she is taller than most Valley men. Her elegant erect posture and graceful movements reflect an élan and beauty of the eternal feminine. I have loved her from afar and worshiper the ground she walks on from the first glimpse I had of her when she had just turned eighteen.

el pipiri pau said...

Olivia L. use to work out at the coutry club Health Club, damn she looked nice in a blue bathing suit, I mean, really nice.
It is true, she is one tall lady, who doesn't mingle with many people.

Anonymous said...

Photo! Mr. editor, pay for a photo of olivia L. and post it.